Within this dance report I will discuss and evaluate the changes of jazz Dance from when it first originated to how and what the style has changed to in current day. I will then discuss three different practitioners and include reference to the musical accompaniment which they then used for their work/choreography; how their approaches to jazz dance varied, and why it has now influenced jazz dance today. The three practitioners I will discuss will be: Bob Fosse, Mia Michaels and Jack Cole. These three practitioners all have different approaches and ideas as to what jazz dance means/meant to them.
Jazz dance first originated in the late 1800s to the mid-1900s, it was influenced by African American vernacular dance and has adapted and changed
…show more content…
He was a dancer choreographer, writer and director; he worked both with musicals, and on screen / off screen acting and movement. He was a very important influential figure in jazz dance and his style was incredibly unique to him- he was like no other. He characterised his movements’ buy using finger snaps, angled bowler hats, gloved fingers, turned in knees and toes and shoulder rolls. On Broadway after winning tony awards for choreography for ‘The Pyjama Game’, ‘ Damn Yankees’, ‘Redhead’, ‘Little Me’, Sweet Charity’, ‘Pippin’, ‘Dancin’, ‘Big Deal’, he then won an Oscar directing, and then three Academy Award nominations. Fosse was very fluent in a huge range of styles and incorporated around 6 styles into a single piece alone. He wrote, directed and choreographed a film called ‘All That Jazz’, which was solely based on his personal life and bad …show more content…
Although on opening night Fosse had a huge heart attack in the sidewalk before the show began and sadly passed away on the way to hospital, which was announced to the cast and audience after they had a standing ovation at the end of the evening. Without a doubt Fosse was probably the biggest influence on Jazz so far and was the reasoning behind Jazz’ turning point in